The Borneo Post

Hollande slams Trump’s ‘double fault’ over Iran nuclear deal

-

SEOUL: Former French president Francois Hollande yesterday slammed Donald Trump’s hardline stance on the Iran nuclear deal — which Paris helped to negotiate — as a ‘double fault’, warning the US president’s ‘unpredicta­bility’ threatened global stability.

Trump’s threat to ditch the landmark 2015 agreement, which saw Tehran dramatical­ly scale back its nuclear ambitions in return for an end to punishing sanctions, has sparked a chorus of foreign support for the pact.

“Donald Trump’s decision not to certify the accord and to demand that Congress strengthen sanctions is, to my eyes, a double fault,” Hollande told a conference in Seoul.

The former leader’s fi rst speech on internatio­nal affairs since leaving the Elysee in May touched on global issues including climate change, economic protection­ism and populist politics — and laid into the ‘confusion’ appearing to emanate from the White House.

Trump has said the agreement was letting Iran off the hook but left it up to the US Congress to decide whether to reimpose sanctions.

The former French leader said the US president’s actions showed a ‘deep misunderst­anding of the negotiatio­n’s purpose’, which was to ‘stop Iran from obtaining weapons, and not to make it change its politics’.

He also accused Trump of ‘damaging the credibilit­y of any future negotiatio­ns with North Korea’ with Washington’s about-turns, a concern shared by European Union ministers.

“It has to be shown that agreements will be kept to in the long term,” Hollande said.

The EU said Monday it would send its chief diplomat Federica Mogherini to Washington next month to fight for the nuclear deal.

Hollande said the world ‘has not been this polarised, in different ways, since 1945’.

“And the role of the US serves to further complicate the situation, especially if confusion reigns at its top.”

In the face of nuclear proliferat­ion, the world needed ‘certainty and stability’, he added. ‘ The worst option is unpredicta­bility, which can lead to irrational­ity’. — AFP

 ??  ?? Liliana Hernandez (centre), representa­tive of the Venezuelan coalition of opposition parties (MUD), talks to the media during a news conference in Caracas, Venezuela. —Reuters photo
Liliana Hernandez (centre), representa­tive of the Venezuelan coalition of opposition parties (MUD), talks to the media during a news conference in Caracas, Venezuela. —Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Francois Hollande
Francois Hollande

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia